Home & Garden
CT's Defense Against Spotted Lanternfly Destruction Begins Now
Established spotted lanternfly populations were recorded last year in 14 states, including in Connecticut.

CONNECTICUT — During spring lawn cleanup, keep your eyes out for spotted lanternfly egg masses, an effective way to slow the spread in Connecticut of this pretty but destructive plant hopper that Agriculture Department officials say poses a serious threat to the nation’s grape, orchard and logging industries.
Established spotted lanternfly populations were recorded last year in 14 states, including Connecticut, but also Delaware, Indiana, Maryland, Massachusetts, Michigan, New Jersey, New York, North Carolina, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, Virginia and West Virginia.
Already this year, some states are expanding spotted lanternfly quarantine areas with expected exploding populations. In general, individuals and businesses in a now 17-county area of that state must be trained and certified by the state before moving any materials that may contain the pests at any stage of development, including egg masses.
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The Connecticut Agricultural Experiment Station has issued a Quarantine Order with defined restricted areas for the exotic pest. The spotted lanternfly has been detected with established populations in Fairfield and New Haven Counties and single individuals intercepted in numerous towns.
Most states are at risk because spotted lanternfly populations move around easily, according to the USDA. Besides the trees they feed on, their preferred places to lay their mud-like egg masses, which can contain as many as 50 eggs, are surfaces on movable objects such as bicycles, lawnmowers, grills and the family car.
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Removing and destroying egg masses now before hungry nymphs emerge is the best defense against their spread, ag officials say. The insects are at their most destructive at that point, feeding on more than 100 varieties of fruit, ornamental and woody trees, as well as vines, vegetables, herbs and grains. Areas with substantial grape industries are worried because a spotted lanternfly infestation can not only reduce yield, but lower the sugar in remaining grapes.
Here’s what to look for:
By now, egg masses will have faded from glossy white to gray or brown, and they’re about an inch and a half long. If you find an egg mass:
Take a picture and report it to CAES. Scrape off egg masses, put them in a plastic zippered bag filled with hand sanitizer, then zip the bag and dispose of it in the garbage.
In a widespread population control effort, people in areas with infestations were encouraged to squish adult lantern flies — before they deposited their egg masses — wherever they encountered them.
“Harming our city's wildlife is prohibited, but in an effort to slow the spread of this troublesome species, we are putting out a one-time call: If you see a spotted lanternfly, please squish and dispose of this invasive pest,” the New York City Parks Department said last August.
Last year, ag officials said spotted lanternflies were moving westward into the central United States, with new reports filed in Iowa, Michigan and North Carolina. Reports were also filed in Kansas in 2021. States farther west, including Utah, California and Oregon, have observed dead lanternflies, though it’s unclear if the plant hoppers naturally migrated there, or hitched a ride with humans.
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